View allAll Photos Tagged constructionworker
a three-fer.......
ANSH scavenger13 boardwalk
(and i realized that this would have been funnier
if i had had a monopoly board)
HMM a possibility for "in a row"
HSS
as a clarification-- these mini people are just over 2 inches tall
I could barely look at these workers repairing a roof in downtown Ljubljana, Slovenia, as they were about 50 metres off the ground. The fact they were just standing there so casually was astounding to me.
I live in a new housing development, so sights such as this are not uncommon around the neighborhood.
Our Daily Challenge: "Work/Working" challenge
轉呀轉~ 人生像個陀螺般...
Adult homework task36 感情/emotion, feeling, sentiment
#Feeling fatigued
張三的歌 - 張懸
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bd57_isq2uM
In Time - There's Still Time - Soundtrack Score HD
Work in progress on the Krakow tramway in ul. Józefa Dietla
Lesser Poland, Poland 19.10.2019
Held der Arbeit
Arbeiten an der Krakauer Straßenbahn in der ul. Józefa Dietla
Kleinpolen, Polen 19.10.2019
At long last, My first exhibition!
This photo and 17 more of my street photos will be on display together with photos from 7 other street photographers from the Gothenburg area.
Come and have a look :)
18/6 to 9/7 at Bildkällan, Falköping
One Single Drop
Sometimes life can throw you a raindrop or two. Or a raindrop.
We can be overwhelmed. We can ponder.
Smile on Saturdays
Hauling the tools at Projekt Slussen.
Okay, here goes..... the photo is 6027 X 4018 pixels which means
that Flickr has reduced the size to 1024 pixels on the longest side. Let's see what it looks like once it is displayed. Probably can't be enlarged when viewing it. Now that it has been uploaded it looks ok when I enlarge it on my screen. Does it look okay on your screen if you enlarge it?
In 1973, while in the Army, I was stationed on Okinawa for one year. I lived in an apartment for part of that time and at some point a building went up across the street. I had a Canon F1 with a Vivatar 75-205. I took this photo from the window of the apartment. No way I can remember the settings.
For those that are confused by my title, Don McCullin is a British photographer famed mostly for his war images. He was on the front line of many global conflicts, from Cyprus to Vietnam to Syria and many more besides. There are photos he took that I'm sure everyone will remember when they see them but perhaps do not know he was the author of.
The very first picture that McCullin ever sold was a shot of a gang of boys spread across the first floor of a bombed out building in north London in the late 50s. This image is nothing like his original image which frankly is one of my favourite images of all time for the way it so brilliantly tells the story of a time and a place. But there is something in my photo which immediately reminded me of McCullin's famous composition but in a VERY different way. Here's a link to McCullin's shot for those that may be interested:
rps.org/news/journal/2021/october/don-mccullin-the-pictur...
And for anyone who truly admires photography it is worth looking up McCullin's work. It is often disturbing because of the subject matter he depicts but it is always exceptional. He is now in his 80s and lives in the quiet English county of Somerset. Instead of wars he now prefers to shoot the landscapes of his adopted county in the most beautiful way. Perhaps an antidote to the terrible things he's witnessed throughout his career.
Crossing Eight Avenue at 34th Street on the way to Penn Station. It was past 10 PM, but the construction site on the corner was lit with those brighter-than-the-sun lights, and the 10-block walk from the Theater District through Times Square was an obstacle course through a raucous human circus. "Keep walking and don't make eye contact" was always the advice of my father, who spent 25 years as a police officer in this area. It is still very good advice. New York City-- June 17, 2022
Photos from the interpretive sign at the Othello Tunnels showing the early phase of their construction in 1914. The November 2021 flooding of the Coquihalla River (due to the atmospheric rivers that swept over B.C.) has left a lot of damage to this historic site.
The Lazy Girl's Guide To Photography: I saw this mural and didn't feel like walking the 2 blocks or so to get a closer shot. I liked this view of it with the 2 construction works doing what construction workers do.
As a result of sloppy construction work at an underground station, the Historical Archive of the City of Cologne in Severinstrasse (Südstadt) collapsed. Two people died and damage totalling over a billion euros was caused to Germany's largest municipal archive.
The photo was taken two weeks after the disaster.
Severinstraße in Cologne's Südstadt (Severinsviertel)
North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany 18.03.2009
Infolge der schlampigen Durchführung von Bauarbeiten an einer U-Bahn-Haltestelle stürzte das Historische Archiv der Stadt Köln in der Severinstrasse (Südstadt) ein. Zwei Menschen starben und ein Schaden von insgesamt über einer Milliarde Euro entstand an dem größten Kommunalarchiv Deutschlands.
Das Foto entstand zwei Wochen nach der Katastrophe.
Severinstraße in der Kölner Südstadt (Severinsviertel)
Nordrhein-Westfalen, Deutschland 18.03.2009
Daily wage labourers take their meals early in the morning and leave for their daily routine. After reaching their destination, they hang their food bowls on shady trees to prevent them from spoiling in the heat. After that, after working at noon, they ate their lunch and went back to work.
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he walks through the frame like a glitch in geometry, suspended between saturated walls and accidental symmetry. the city offers no stage, yet sometimes, it performs.
As long as you have a window, life is exciting
- Gladys Taber
One more week in the rebuild and then clean up the mess :-(
a fluorescent vest slices through the stillness like a signal flare in the void. framed by cones and cautioned lines, a worker steps deliberately into the unknown—caught at the threshold between structured sunlight and a cavernous dark. in this stark geometry of light and shade, ordinary labor feels mythic, like a figure crossing realms.
the sign says works. he does not. for a few minutes the city continues without him, the traffic, the noise, the endless construction. he leans against a pole and disappears into his phone. everyone does this. millions of times a day. we stand in one place and leave for another. the body remains. the mind travels. when he looks up again, nothing will have changed. except maybe everything.
The company that works with the formwork and concrete called a food truck to make wood-fired oven pizza for everyone!
This at the construction site of the new swimming arena in Täby, north of Stockholm, Sweden.
Photos from the interpretive sign at the Othello Tunnels showing the early phase of their construction in 1914. The November 2021 flooding of the Coquihalla River (due to the atmospheric rivers that swept over B.C.) has left a lot of damage to this historic site.
from above, they become ants in a world they did not design, their orange vests small flames against concrete certainty. yellow cables snake through shadows like veins of possibility, connecting what was to what will be. in this geometry of progress, human hands still matter most. we build cathedrals from steel and glass, but it is the workers who breathe life into our dreams. every structure is a prayer written in sweat and precision.